104 Kan. 72 | Kan. | 1919
In an action under the workmen’s compensation law, plaintiff recovered judgment, and defendant appeals.
Plaintiff was in the employ of the Hutchinson Egg Case Filler Company; that company and the Hutchinson Box Board and Paper Company occupied adjoining tracts of land, upon which their factories were located, a space of about, sixty feet separating their main buildings. At each factory there was a platform dock, and these were connected by a runway -over which strawboard and other material used in the egg case fil,ler factory were conveyed from the box board factory. The employees of defendant would go over this runway, where they would get trucks loaded with the strawboard' and take them across to the defendant’s factory. The runway crossed over a switch track located between the two factories; and whenever a box car happened to be on the switch track, the floor of the car would be used as a part of the runway, a sheet of steel about six feet square being laid between the car and the defendant’s dock, and the space between the car and the box board company’s dock being bridged in the same way, so that a continuous passage could be had between the two factories. On the day plaintiff was injured, he was sent to the box board factory to get a truck loaded with strawboard weighing about twenty-four hundred pounds, and with the help of an employee of the box board company, was returning by way of the connecting runway when the sheet of steel between the defendant’s dock and the floor of the box car slipped, throwing plaintiff between the car and the dock; the truck fell upon him and he sustained serious injuries.
The defendant demurred to the evidence on the ground that plaintiff was not shown to have received his injuries while “on, in or about” the factory or plant where he was employed. It is urged that the court erred in overruling the demurrer. In view of the undisputed'facts, the point hardly rises to the dignity of a serious contention. It cannot be said that the facts bring the case within the doctrine of Bevard v. Coal Co., 101 Kan. 207, 165 Pac. 657, where it was held that a demurrer to the petition was properly sustained because the accident did not occur on, in or about a mine, within the meaning of the compensation act. In that case the defendant operated two
In another recent case, Hicks v. Swift & Co., 101 Kan. 760, 168 Pac. 905, the same question arose where the injured workman was employed to drive a truck for the delivery of meat from the defendant’s packing house in Kansas City, Kan., to its customers in Kansas City, Mo., and was injured by a box of meat falling on him while he was making a delivery several miles from the packing house. It was held that he was not injured on, in or about the factory where he was employed. In the present case plaintiff, at the time of his injury, was within a few feet of the dock which was a part of the defendant’s factory. Under the instructions of his foreman, he took a previously defined route between the two factories over a connecting way which was used in his employer’s business. We think the entire runway from the defendant’s factory over to the factory of the box board company was within such close proximity to the defendant’s place of business, and so used as part of it, that if the injury had happened under the same circumstance, but on the other side of the box car, or on the other end of the runway, or even on the dock of the “other factory, it might well be said that the plaintiff was injured while in, on or about the factory and premises of his employer.
The plaintiff was earning, at the time of his injury, a weekly wage of $13. In answer to special questions, the jury found that he was not totally incapacitated, but was incapacitated to the extent of “about 50 per cent,” and that he will be able to earn in the future, in some suitable employment, “about 50 per cent” of his former wages. While the record does not show the precise number of days he was totally disabled, it is practically conceded by both parties that he was totally incapacitated for the period of about 26 weeks. Under the statute he was entitled during total disability to one-half his usual earnings, which would amount to $169. It is conceded that the defendant paid him during this period $168.84, which is substantially the full amount for the time, he was totally disabled. The jury assessed the amount of his recovery at $1,768.84, less $168.84, or $1,600.
The judgment will be modified by reducing it to tfye amount which the plaintiff is entitled to recover for 390 weeks at $3.25 a week. In all other respects the judgment and orders of the trial court are affirmed.